|
A hacker named Kirllos has a rare deal for
anyone who wants to spam, steal or scam on Facebook: an unprecedented
number of user accounts offered at rock-bottom prices. Researchers at
VeriSign's iDefense group recently spotted Kirllos selling Facebook user
names and passwords in an underground hacker forum, but what really
caught their attention was the volume of credentials he had for sale:
1.5 million accounts.
|
IDefense doesn't know if Kirllos'
accounts are legitimate, and Facebook didn't respond to messages
Thursday seeking comment. If they are legitimate, he has the account
information of about one in every 300 Facebook users. His asking price
varies from $25 to $45 per 1,000 accounts, depending on the number of
contacts each user has.
To date, Kirllos seems to have sold close to 700,000 accounts,
according to VeriSign Director of Cyber Intelligence Rick Howard.
Hackers have been selling stolen social-networking credentials for
a while -- VeriSign has seen a brisk trade in names and passwords for
Russia's VKontakte, for example. But now the trend is to go after global
targets such as Facebook, Howard said.
Facebook has more than 400 million users worldwide, many of whom
fall victim to scams each day. In one such scam, criminals send out
messages from a compromised account, telling friends that the account's
owner is trapped in a foreign country and needs money to get home.
In another, they send Web links that lead to malicious software,
telling friends that it's a hilarious or sensationalistic video.
"People will follow it because they believe it was a friend that
told them to go to this link," said Randy Abrams, director of technical
education with security vendor Eset. Once the malware gets installed,
criminals can steal more passwords, break into bank accounts, or simply
use the computers to send spam or launch distributed denial of service
attacks. "There's just a plethora of things that people can do if they
can trick people into installing their software," he said.
Kirllos' Facebook prices are extremely cheap compared to what
others are charging. In its most recent
Internet Security Threat Report, Symantec found that e-mail
usernames and passwords typically went for between $1 to $20 per account
-- Kirllos wants as little as $0.025 per Facebook account. More coveted
credit card or bank account details can go for much more, ranging
between $0.85 to $30 for credit card numbers to $15 to $850 for
top-quality online bank accounts.
News source:
Computer World
|